Target bus stop dangers

This summer, I heard the harrowing story of Jaycee Dugard’s life for nearly two decades after she was abducted from a school bus stop in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., in 1991 by convicted sex offender Phillip Garrido and held captive in the backyard of his home.

This got me thinking about what school districts can do to maximize student safety at bus stops.

Sexual predator awareness is vital 
Max Christensen, executive officer of school transportation at the Iowa Department of Education, suggests keeping bus stops away from areas that sexual predators and sex offenders might find inviting. Knowing where they live in relation to where you might place bus stops — which involves having access to a database of sex offenders in your area — is also important.  

Dr. Duane Dobbert, a criminal forensics studies professor at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers, and a fellow of the American College of Forensic Examiners, offers a program called “School Bus Drivers: The 1st Line of Defense Against Child Sexual Predators.” In the program, he explains the difference between a sexual predator and a sex offender and discusses what school bus drivers should do if they see a suspicious person at a bus stop or school site.

“Carry a notepad and jot down the day, date, time and information pertaining to the person and his or her vehicle, and turn it in to the transportation director,” Dobbert recommends. “If you are particularly concerned about a situation, call your dispatcher and have him or her call law enforcement.” 

(For more information about Dobbert’s program, go here.)

Ensure students can be seen
Walking to bus stops before the sun comes up can be dangerous. In 2009, Timothy Wysong, transportation director at Eanes Independent School District in Austin, Texas, addressed this by starting the “Be Seen, Be Safe” campaign.  Round, flashing 2-inch LED lights were distributed to elementary school students for them to wear on the morning walk to their bus stops.

The campaign is still in place, and Wysong’s operation is now focusing on distributing the lights to students in kindergarten through third grade.

“We feel like they’re at the biggest risk,” he explains. “We’re also adding stop-arm cameras to our buses this year, and we’ve added an LED sign to the back of the buses that gives motorists a warning when our buses are preparing to stop — it changes to ‘Do Not Pass.’”

Establish safe walking routes
Christensen also recommends reviewing the path that kids take to get to and from a bus stop.

“Though legally transportation operators aren’t required to look at how kids get to the bus stop, we really should look at this issue as a matter of public service to help keep our kids safe both before and after they get on or off the school bus,” he says.

In Iowa, many districts work closely with the state’s Safe Routes to School coordinator to establish safe walking routes to school bus stops.

“Another initiative is training our school bus drivers to be aware of the danger zone and potential hazards at every bus stop,” Christensen says. “An added component to our training this year is the inclusion of School Bus First Observer.”  

Has your operation established a program or efforts to keep students safe at school bus stops? If so, we'd like to hear about them. Post a comment below or send an e-mail to info@schoolbusfleet.com.

Until next time,

Kelly Roher
Managing Editor                     
Print | posted on Friday, September 16, 2011 10:03 AM

Comments

 re: Target bus stop dangers

left by Dan Luttrell at 9/19/2011 2:56 PM
As for parents we need to speak to our school boards and administrators to make sure they are as concerned about safe school bus stops as we parents are. Speak to your local Sheriff to make sure there is a sexual predator data base parents can log onto to make sure their neighborhood is safe enough for their child to be walking to and from school. Most police agencies have police cars out and about during the school arrival and dismissal times. Get involved in your community and don't be afraid to ask questions and pay attention to what they tell you.

 re: Target bus stop dangers

left by Don Todd at 9/19/2011 5:47 PM
I agree that the schools should definitely be more involved in the placement of the bus stops, but I also remember that my parents went with me to the bus stop while I was in the younger grades. Today, so many parents don't want to get out of the house and go with their kids, they just want to look out the window and see the bus stop. Unfortunately, I don't see how a big large school bus can possibly get that close to everyone's house so that the parents can see it from the comfort of their living room window. I bet that the routes would be 2-3 times as long going in and out of every street and with the high cost of fuel, those same parents would be complaining about the higher taxes. As a parent myself, I went with my son to the bus stop EVERYDAY or I drove him to school! Come on parents, the school can't do everything, you and I have access to the same database and we can do our part to help them keep efficient bus routes and still keep our kids safe at the same time!

 re: Target bus stop dangers

left by Kyle at 9/20/2011 5:22 AM
It's a parental thing. If a parent knows there's a preditor in the area (who wouldn't know, with the websites showing where they live and the police reports when one is released) THEY need to stay with their children at the bus stop. Better yet, they should ALWAYS stay with their children at the bus stop. Tired of parents always wanting this person or that person doing what THE PARENT should be doing!

 re: Target bus stop dangers

left by Elizabeth Sawning at 9/20/2011 2:56 PM
I have found it is also important to the safety of students at our bus stops, that the safe/good behavior is taught and inforced by schools and parents. Students who are lined up ready to board a bus are more aware than the stops where students are throwing a football, hiding behind the neighbors hedge smoking and walking to the stop after the bus arrives.

 re: Target bus stop dangers

left by Connie Kent at 9/21/2011 6:26 AM
As a school bus driver it is amazing to me that I have to encourage the parent to be at the bus stop with their kindergartner. There are a lot of safety reasons - a stray animal, a lurking predator, crazy drivers, unruly children, etc. The children are 13 times safer in the bus than in their parent's vehicle but we've got to get them into and off the bus. There is a lot of parental responsibility that seems to be passed to the school.

# re: Target bus stop dangers

left by jkraemer at 9/21/2011 12:53 PM
The story is excellent as far as it goes. There are some missing bus stop essentials that are critical to children's safety at bus stops. Bus drivers do have a shared responsibility, but are not the first line of defense. Parents, and sometimes the kids themselves, are the actual first line of defense at bus stops, in my opinion. I tremble every time I read about a 26-year-old mother in Tacoma, Washington, that stopped a kidnapping attempt on her 6-year-old daughter. The press reported that, the attempt happened after the kindergartner was let off her school bus near her home. The child's mother said she grabbed her daughter's feet as the man tried to pull the girl into his car. She said the man finally let go and drove off. (~ Source, Death at the school bus stop.) We know the most likely outcome had the parent not been present. There are many times that abductors have been stopped by parents, and also by students that recognized the event and knew what to do next. Without this first line of defense more kids would be abducted.

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